A Study of Pleasure and PainTheosophical Press, 1962 - 97 من الصفحات The theme of this book is that pain is functional in the advancement and enrichment of life in nature and in man, therefore it should be received with understanding and consideration. The arguments found within are purely scientific and illustrated by examples in the lives of common people. Fully discussed are the topics of how pain arises and ceases and the different kinds of pain. |
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الصفحة 16
... unity is so fundamentally present and powerful that the body - of plant , animal or man- cannot be said to be a mere accumulation of parts , accretions or alliances . This is seen in the fact that the parts derive their char- acter from ...
... unity is so fundamentally present and powerful that the body - of plant , animal or man- cannot be said to be a mere accumulation of parts , accretions or alliances . This is seen in the fact that the parts derive their char- acter from ...
الصفحة 61
... unity , comparable on a small scale with the invisible forces ( such as gravitation ) and laws ( such as causality ) which play such a great part in the unification or coherence of entire existence , or " the world . " This withdrawal ...
... unity , comparable on a small scale with the invisible forces ( such as gravitation ) and laws ( such as causality ) which play such a great part in the unification or coherence of entire existence , or " the world . " This withdrawal ...
الصفحة 70
... unity of interest and welfare which love presents will be followed by some conscious realization of the unity of our very life . In the triumvirate of universal relationships , as Unity , Harmony and Variety , we can see love as harmony ...
... unity of interest and welfare which love presents will be followed by some conscious realization of the unity of our very life . In the triumvirate of universal relationships , as Unity , Harmony and Variety , we can see love as harmony ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action activity animal antelope anxiety attention awakening better Bhagavad Gita bodily body Buddha called cause Chapter coherence comes consciousness death doctrine emotional pains enhancement enjoyment Epictetus Epicurean evolution example experience extent eyes fact faculties feeling function further give grow happiness Hindu human hunger ice-cream idea impulse individual intellect intelligence interest Jesus Julian Huxley kind knowledge law of karma legs living look lower mind material forms matter means meditation memory ment mental modern nature nirvana object observed old age one's organs ovum paramecium Patanjali PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY perhaps person picture plants pleasure present psychosis purusha realization reason regard Sankhya Sanskrit seen self-image sense sexual selection Sir Edwin Arnold sometimes speak stages Stoic Theosophical Society Theosophists things thinking thought tion tree trouble true truth uncon unity word Yoga Yoga Sutras